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81 5 TERMS 150 PER TEAR OBERLIN LORAIN CO 0 FRIDAY AUGUST 15 1884 VOLUME XXV NUMBER 25 DIRECTORY POST OFflOE DEPASTMENT OFFICK hours from 7 a m to S p m Open Saturday night until fl30 MAILS LSATI Bone Fst 860 x M u40rM 8ir MwWMt 715 1 M 4rH Qolnl to IlttaOeld Wellington 600 A H If AIL DISTRIBUTED from Fast HO From Wot 700 a M 10001 M 115P From Wellington 500 T H Money order department open fortraaaclon of buainess from 7 ft m to 7 p m BATTE0AD LAKE 8HORK A MICHIOAM SOUTHERN K Standard or fiuih Meridian Time GOING EAST No 24 BUFFALO A000MM0DA HOS Loaves Obcrliu 918 a m arrivea at Cleveland 1036 a in So12 0HI0AQJ4 ST L0TJlBtirfES8 Leaves berli a 1242 p m arrives atCleveland 155 pm go 2 NEW YORK EXPRES8Toaves Oberlin 8J4 p m arrives at Cleveland 940 p m So 72 WAY FREIGHT Leaves Oberlin 936 GOING WEST Ho 2 MICHIGAN AUOOJJMODATrOHLeaves Cleveland tuu a m arrives at Oberlin 718 a m Ho n TOLEDO EXPRESS Leaves Cleveland 8 2li p m arrives at Oberlin 438 p m Ho 9 PA0IFT0 EIPRG88Leaves Cleveland tLJ p m leaves Oberlin at 747 n m Ho 73 WAY FREIGHT Leaves Oberlin 750 AI J YOUNG Agent county ornoEEs Prosecuting Attorney D 3 Nye Auditor O Koot Treasure Q H Robblnl Clerk II 3 Lewis Sherif Calvin Ensign Recorder W E Cahoot Probate Judge H I Unman Surveyor T C Bowen CommiesionertV S MillB E P Burell W M Crandall Infirmary Director 1 8 Straw 8 D Bacon Bradford Race EUSSIA TOWNSHIP 7 run teen T H Mnmford S B Dudley J M Worcesler OUr lb W B Dnrand Treasurer Edwin Rojral AsxessorH O Swilt Constables Alien Nowell Geo VF Gibson J B A bell Justices of the PeaaB W Locke Joel Myers Arden Dale OBERLIN VILLAGE MayorC A Motcnlf nouncilmen Elwlo Kcgnl W G Ballnt1ne C II Favel J S Peck A Deming W M MitclieU OfrkW P M Gilbert Treasurer O F Carter MarshallsKttc L Newton Chief Engineer Hire Department TWillonshby 0BEELIN PUBLIC S0H00LS Members of Board of Education Judson Smith CHChurchill E J Goodrich WBDurand E P Johnson H G Carpenter OFFICERS OF BOA ED President Jiidaon Smith C Urk W B Uurand Treamtrer B J Goodrich Stipe in tend en t of Schools G W Wite 0BEELIN 0HUE0HES First Cong Chdroh NortnwcBt corner ol Main abd Lorain streets Rev James Brand Pastor derviccs H30 a m and 7 p m Wookly prayer mooting Friday afternoon oclock and every Thursday evening in the Church Chapel Sunday School 9 amPastors residence No la South Profoaaorst Second Cong CntJRon South side Wont College Btrcct Pulpit supplied hv Profs J M Ellis Judson Smith and G FWrightServices 1030 a m and 7 p m Weekly prayer meeting on Thursday evening in the lecture room Sunday School 9 a m Christ PEi ChctroQ No 63 and Rectory No 05 South Main St Holy Communion the first Sunday of each month and upon tho Holy days of tho Eclcsiastical year Sunday school 80 a m Seats free Baptist Church No 3 East LorainStRev Geo W Noad Pastor Sorvicoa 1030am and 7 nra Sunday School 13 m Young Peoples Prayer Meetin k Sunday at 545 p m Prayer meeting Thursday evening Pastor residence 16 East Lorain street First Methodist Kpiscopal CHURCH No 68 South Main st Rev W P McDowell Pastor ino insn ii m and TKMu m Seats free Anndiiv School 9 a m Prayer mcctingB Sun nvnnino at a nclock in north Clas6room forold folkn in south Classroom for young people Weekiv Prayer meeting inurm evening PaBtora rebiilenoe 71 South M treet RDST M E CHORCH South Water St between Mill and Grovoland Key Scott Ward Pax tor Resiacico No Servicos 1030 a m 3 p m 7 pm Sabbath School 2 p m Weoky Prayer meetingThurartav evening Ofllcial Churoh meeting every Monday eveninjt BUSINESS 0AEDS A TTORNS y S JH LANG AttornoyatLaw Notary Pub 1 io and General Land Insurance andPenlion Aitent No 8 Worcesters Block I A WEBSTER Attorney atLaw Notary Publio and Real Estate Agent Oflce ovcrl and 8 South Mainstcert Oberlin Ohio I A Webster Ely Block Elyria a GEO P A CHAS A METCALF Attorneys at Law Notaries Publio and Real Estate Agents Collodions oromptly maue ui over the Post Oftino Uberlin O 18 CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK of Oberlin Buy and Sell GovernmcntBonds Coin and Coupons Korotirn and Domestic Exchange tfraiu ivcn upou au imris hih C U Randall Cashier M Btonk President MA TUSOVM Barber Shop College Place Lt Room No 3 College Place Draying Moving Pianos a specialty O MERLIN COLLEGE WRITINGDEPTThorough inHtiuction given in Practical and Ornamental Pi niinsbip andBookkeeping Rooms over No 14 West College st j5ly Principal DRKS8 VAkiya Miss R A HOFFMAN Dress and Cloak Maker No 1 College Place Oherlin Ohio Cutting and fitting bv accurate moasure and original donigniiiK Bpeciaities 35 ly VKOUGlliTH JU GARDNER t CO Druggists rc scrijitions accurately compounded at all hours r if HARMON Dealer in Drugs Modi J cines Penumes Toilet Articles LampB W fillffgf Sr HG MUST ED Dentist Office ovor No 8 W est College Street First stairway East of PostOlucoOler1ln O 48tf F StlUlALL Dcntint First door west i of th PostOflloe Gives gas when ho Artj B A RD WA RX i smvna and Tin Ware Solo Agents for Btowarts Stoves Job work done in tho best manner rTEKD4 EDWARDS Dealers in Stoves Tin V anil Sheet Iron Ware and Hardware of kinds Merchants Exchange North Malr V llOLTEH Watchmaker Engraver and dealer in Wiitchcs Clocks Jewelry and prwaro No 2 West College st 37 lirXRY STAJSLJCS CPA V EL Proprietor City Stables No North Main Ht Oberlin O Good Team furnished at all hours and atreasoniai rates ma cniNsn Y er in Steam EnKine and Steam Boili Doalerin Second Hand BuilersandED Norwalk Obio 1 PHYSICIANS DR J AUSTIN Office and Residence No 15 East College street Office hours from 3X to 10 a H S to 8 r M and 7 to 8 evening 1 tf r c bunce Physician andSurthe Kew Brick Block geon Ofllci over Streators store Residence No 5 South rrressor street Calls in the country tiny or n ight prom p ily ataMded to 7 Bm Dun C JUMP Physician ard Surzeon fllce In Carpenters Block ovei Johnsons more fllce hours from 3 to 6 p mResidence 8A North Main street 8ly D Sun PKNNIMAN Phvsician and rtreon Office and residence No 33 West Lollege htreet 44 ly P17BLI8HID ETIBT THIDAT AT No 27 South Malnst Oberlin O EDITOR AND PROPRIITOB TTm FWH it Livi Papih miitt tin ni Local ami County Nvs Letters irom the People everyday 1 optc neeriui Letrers Irom lor residents and tizens temnorarilv ohscnt Editorial Commcna in Current Events and a ted amount oi arefnllv Selected Matter Its contents are to it great extent writtenexpressly for its columns competent iocai orrespunacnts at every mportant point in the Coipty keep the renders ntormedof everv veut transDirinur ui their re spective localities tourt iroceeuings ana otner joanty ieat News fully and accurately reported Oberlin and Cleveland Markets corrected every week It is Republican in pi 1 no pie but not offensively artisan progressive in all that relates to the uildirtr ud 01 the business morals and nublic sentiment of the community and aggressive in respect to those things detrhnentl to public welfare Terms o Subaoidptlon t 150 per year Parts of a year in prtiportion Single copies 5 Address changed at the pleasure of the subscri ber No extra charge for postage ArlvTtiBkmnntB of an unobjectionable character inserted on favorable terms Rates made known on application to the Proprietor Transient advertisements cash In advance Bills for regular advertising nreannteri nnar terly Job Prlntinar The Niws Opfic is well equipped with Firstclass Steam Presses and good material and is prepared to executeanything in the printing Hue from a one line card to aiun sneei poster Facts are Stubborn Things is there anything in any of the num erous advertisements of the Royal Bak ing fowdcr to show that the Koyai does not use Ammonia and Tartaric Acid as cheap substitutes for Cream of Tartar ur is there any charge or the slightest insinuation in those advertisements that Clevelands Superior Baking Pow der contains anything but the purest Grape Cream of Tartar and Bicarbonate of Soda with a small portion of flour hs a preservative Ammonia ana Tartaric Acid produce a cheap leavening gas which is not to be compared in the practical test o baking with the desirable Carbonic Acid gas generated by the exclusive use 01 tee expensive u ream 01 ltirtar Use Clevelands Superior Bakin Powder and judge for yourself of its superiority THE 00MMANDEEIN0HIEF THE G A B OF Gen John Konntz of Toledo 0 The Grand Army of the Republic at ita late reunion held in Minneapolis Minn on the sixth ballot elected Gen John Konntz of Toledo O itsCommanderinChief for the ensuing year Gen Kountz succeeds Commander Beath and is the youngest official head of the G A R ever elected by that or ganization Gen Kountz is an Ohio man by birth and residence having been born Lucas county March 25 1846 In 1862 upon the organization of the Thirty1 seventh Ohio Volunteers he enlisted in that regiment as a drummer boy and bravely conducted himself in a number of heavy battleB His regiment was in ihe charge upon the heights ofMissionary Ridge when a friend of young Konntss fell at hi side killed The drummer boy threw away his drum seized the musket and Bnrprised bib comrades by an activity and bravery in that bloody struggle that would have done credit to the most fearless soldier Near the close of the engagement be fell so severely wounded in the leg that amputation became necessary After the close of the rebellion bereturned home an orphan with only a sister to greet his coming In time hiB sterling qualities as a business manattracted public admiration and thevoters of his native county honored him with its Treasurership for two years ai d for a like period be was Commit sioner of Records He then entered theinsurance business and is now the proprietor of a large and successful agency in Toledo Ever since the organization of the G A R in 1866 Mr Konntz has been ideniifitd with it in an active capacity Beginr iag with the Adjutancy of h b Post he was then advanced to itsCommand ership then successively to the Assistant Quartermaster General and Commandership of the Department of Ohio and lastly to the bigest honor of the G A R the CommanderinChief of the order for the United States Wide Awake D Lothrop Co Boston Mass 300 per year The Wide Awake for August contains the lastpart of Elizabeth Stuart Phelpss story A Jlrave Girl The opening story Is for girls and an excellent one in its lesson The boys have in their turn an amusinar hunting story Oslts The months Illustration of Wordsworths poem is exquisite Our RoyalNeighbors at Sandringham is the name of a story about the children of the Prince of Wales This pretty midsummer number is also adorned with poems aud pictu es about the fairies of tho season Domorest Illustrated Monthly Mag azine for September is an extremely useful and eutertaiDing number The tiles and poems are excellent and The Enelish Cathedrals The Romance of the Century and Seeing New York by Jenny June are arliclea of unusual interest There is much that wilt prove v rv useful in the household in the way of fancywork and fashion aud the ill trationsadd greatly to the attractiveness of this number Medea a hne oil painting from the original by N Sichel forms the frontispiece NEWSSUKSIABY Important Intelligence from All Parts DOMESTIC Two sqcadbons of United States cavait ry descended upon Oklahomn Paynes camp at Rock Fails I T on the 7th and arrested the leaders and started them off for Port Smith The women children and rrew offenders wereoscorted to the Kansas lino Tho boardinghouse drugstore and some other cheap structures were burned and not a vestige of the settlement wai permitted to remain i Two htnkrs were killed and a third was fatally injured by the fall of twentyfive tons of topcoal in a colliery atShenandoah Pa a few days ago The defendant in a Mother Hubbard dress case at Omaha was dismissed on the 7th deference to public opinion causing the ChiefofPoHce not to prosecute The style of dress involved was being worn more than ever Tax City of San Francisco embarked Nineteen Chinese lepers on the 7th foi their native land giving each five dollars tfid paying full fare While going to campmeeting a few days ago Sam Faulkner and Henry Allen accosted the two Wood all brothers neai Predonia Tex Firing began Allenbeing shot dead the Woodalls being mor tally hurt and Faulkner might possibly recover An American railway oompanyoperating in Mexico received information on the 7th that diplomatic relations between that country and England which weresuspended on the death of Maximilian had been felly restored The Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America in session at Chicago on the 7th elected Rev James M Cleary ofWisconsin to the Presidency About a dozen white citizens of Fairfax Va on receiving information recently that a young lady was being followed home In the country by a negro rode onl and captured the villain who was given one hundred lashes on the bare back Toe iron mills at Pittsburgh on the 7th were employing 7000 men less than last yeax and the depression was greater tha for several years GovxjtKOR Sheldon of New Mexico issued a proclamation on the 7th for the inspection of cattle no matter from what aectton before they were permitted to enter the Territory At the session of the National Christian Sunday School Association at Indianapolis on the 7th A R Benson of Indiana was elected President and F M Green oJ Ohio Secretary The Secretary of the Interior received word at Washington on the 7th that one thousand Piegan Indians at the Black eel Agency in Montana were actuallystarving The death rate was large I TffiB Grand Jury at Petersbnrg Va oe theTtfc indicted the officers and several employes of the wrecked Planters Bank for misdemeanor or for felony Nkaa Wilkesbarre Pa a few days agt two Brothers David and Solomon Slusher were suffocated by firedamp i A niecoMOTrvE struck a carriage on 4 the 8th cshtaining five persons who werereturning from a funeral at Connors Station Pa killing four persons and the twe horses and demolishing the vehicle DnitmO the seven days ended on the 8th therVwere 276 business failures in th TJnlSed States against 241 the previous seven dnys and 160 for thecorrespondingi period e5 1883 I In an attempt to beat bis recordJayEyeSee at Buffalo the 8th trottedwithout a skip in 210S A runaway horse on the 8th draggedexSheriff Col bath and Mrs Leatherman onto the railway track at Lima O and a switching engine killed both of them the horse escaping The main shaft of the monument tc George Washington at the National capi tal on the 8th reached a height of fivehundred feet and preparations for erecting the roof would be commenced It was announced on the 8th that in the neighborhood of Point Pleasant W Va three farmers at different points had suf fered the loss of wheat fields from fires set by Incendiaries Cokb operators in Pennsylvania a loud in their complaints about the dullness ef the trade Overproduction is the cause of the present depression Try AS fever and pleuro pneumonia ap peared on the 8th among the herds in the vicinity of Lancaster Pa The infected herds had been quarantined Holmes Lafferty Co dealers in ilive stock at Pittsburgh madeassignments a few days ago with liabilities ol flOOOOO The Penn Bank suspension caused the failure i Owb hundred and fifty men In the La Belle Nail Mill at Wheeling weredischarged on the 8th the millownersdeciding to procure their steel bars from Pittsburgh doing away with their forge department If other mills adopted this plan five thousand persona would be thrown oat of employment The new moTwnent had caused consternation at Wheeling i The Postoffice Department is making preparations for a fine exhibit of postal supplies at the New Orleans Exhibition which will soon be forwarded to that city Dorothea Gordon was on the 8th found hanging in the woods near Mount Carmel Ky with a rope made from her dress Foul play was suspected A severe shock of earthquake was felt along the Atlantic coast on the 10th alittle after two p m extending fromPhiladelphia to Portland Me and as far in land as Cleveland The shock lasted about ten seconds and caused very sorious alarm particularly in New Tork City No serious damage was done though houses were badly shaken some ceilings were cracked and the people woreterribly frightened A second shock was felt in some places Br the falling in of some walls on the 10th during the progross of a Are at Car letsburg Ky three men Bob Miller John Graham and David Kinner were killed and a number were seriously wounded The damage to property amounted to 76 000 A tilekiln collapsed near Lima O the other dav burying Ave workmen two of whom were mortally injured At Arlington Tox on the 9th R A Lindsay entered the house of his step father James A Wright and shot him dead in bed Then he killed hisstepsister Fanny fired several ineffective shots at his fleeing sister and escaped to the woeds The cause for the murders was a mystery Two brothers William and Thomas Jennings aged respectively ten and twelve years quarreled recently near Pikoton Mo when the younger plunged a knife into the neck of the other severing the juguhar vein and causing death in a few minutes The Missouri River boat MarthaStephens sank on the morning of the 9thbetween Bonneville and Arrow Rock five persons being drowned and two scalded to death For posting Socialist proclamations three men were fined five dollars each at New York on the 9th A notoriousCommunist paid the fines The citizens of Lnmberton O on tho 10th drovo from town a large family named Myers suspected of various crimes and burned their houso when they loft The Agricultural Department ntWashIntrton aimouncfid on tho 9th an improve ment in the corulrtiou of cotton since last repwrt and that the corn average was hitrher than in any August since 1SS0 Oais had faHen off a fraction wliilobarlewaud buckwheat was up to the average Tbeiniroewcts for larjge crops of tobacco andpotato3S were favoraM fS ouacrrowwjnsa on tho lOth came oat of ttm tesbee on an island in Nigani rexltaiHa Brangr a watch loape Into the rapids and was hurried over the Horseshoe fall An iron firm of Louisville on the 9tb sent circulars throughout the country urging that all furnaces be banked for four weeks with a hope of increasing prices Showers Brothers bedstead factory at Bloomington Ind was consumed by fire the other afternoon causing a loss inexcess of 80000 The employment of large numbers of 1 Canadians on American vessels on the lakes led to legislation In Congress The acting Secretary of the Treasury on the 9th ordered inspectors neither to renew nor issue licenses to officers of steamvessels who are not citizens of the United States Another Bhock of earthquake was felt in the villages along the south side ol Long Island on the afternoon of the 11th It was not as heavy as tha day previous but sufficient to cause excitement A shock was also felt at Mount Washington in Massachusetts which awakened the people i A Brooklyn streetcar was struck by a train at a crossing a few days ago the conductor being killed and five passenger wounded one seriously John Butler a farmer of Hanover County Va shot his wife fatally a few days ago He had been beating a child and his wife interfered and he turnedupon her She had him arrested but heescaped from the officer and returning home shot his wife At Switz City Ind the other night George Rankin aged nineteenaccidentally shot his brother thirteen years old George then shot himself through the breast and died soon after while his mothers death was momentarilyexpected In Lewis County Term two Mormonelders who were holding meetings were Bhot dead by masked men a few days ago and a warning was given to others to leave th country The Wall Street Bank of New Tor closod its doors on the 11th The shortage was said to be about 300000 and wat caused by the defalcation of the cashier J P Dickinson Since August 1 the United StatesTreasury has paid out 2003000 in gold leaving the amount above the reserve point13600000 Another slaughter of horsethieves by cowboys took place a few days ago in th Muscleshell region in Montana nine rob bers being killed It was stated that then was never a period in the history of ttw Territory when so much horsethieving was going on and the citizens weredetermined to effectually stop it Fully fifty thieves had been hanged or shot in the pagl month Hart Allen of Macon Ga alandowner was killed the 11th by John Taylor his tenanted uring a quarrel aboul the rent One portion of the Minnesota State Cap itol building at St Paul has beenpronounced unsafe and persons are prohibit ed from entering it i Thomas Bolar and R W McHatton two old and respected citizens of Elmweod Mo were fatally injured a few dayB ag by a runaway team John Holcomb was arrested at St Louii on the 11th and upon bemgsearchedseveral fifty dollar counterfeit bills new and crisp were found The boiler of an Ohio River propoRai exploded on the llth opposite KadJson Ind killing the engineer A mstowSu was on a raft some distance away wa thrown into the river and drowned j Only three eig bit hs o the rail furnaces of the United States are now in operation At twentythree leading clear inghouses in the UBitedtatesthe exchaDgas during the week ended onthe 9th aggregated 724 871993 against 744032494 the previous week As compared withthe correspond ing period of 1883 the clearings showed decrease of 104 per cent PERSONAL AMD POLITICAL General Butler on the 6fch sent a let ter to the New York Sun stating that h intendod to stand by the nominations ol the Greeubackers and An ti Monopolists for President and hoped everybody would vote for him who thought it was the be thing to do The New Jersey Republicans met in State Convention at Trenton on the 6th and nominated candidates forPresidential electors Congressional nominations were mad as follows on the 7th Republican Ohio First District Benjamin Butterworth Second Charles E Brown Eighth Judge Little Indiana Fourth District John O Cravens Iowa Third District D B Henderson renominated Soutli Carolina Fifth District W H Weller Democratic Ohio Fourth District C M Anderson Virginia Tenth District J Randolph Tucker renominated Nortfc Carolina Seventh District Kerr Craig Georgia Tenth District Henry K Harris Pennsylvania Twenty first District C E Boyle renominated The National Dental Association at Sar atoga on the 8th elected George H Cash ingtoo of Chicago President and decided to meet next year at Minneapolis John Jourdan tho notorious burglai who robbed the Middletown Conn Sav ings Bank of 43000 was captured in New York on the Sth The Bear Thetis and Alert of the Greelv expedition arrived at Governors Island N Y on the 8th and were received by Secretary Lincoln Generals Sheridan and Hancock and other officials the forts firing a funeral salute The bodies of the dead would lie in state in the hospital un1 til removed by friends Congressional nominations were made on the Sth as follows Democratic South Carolina Second District George DTillman Third D Wyatt Aiken NorthCarolina Eighth District W H BL Cowles Pennsylvania Twentyseventh District William L Scott Greeubackers Kansas Fourth District M D Tenuy Dr J P Hammond rector of St Georges Church nt Baltimore dropped dead a few days ago from heartdisease The Greenbackers of the Seventeenth Illinois District have nominated Elder James M Morgan for Congressman ii B Elliott formerly a member of Congress from Sonth Carolina andconsidered the most eloquent negro orator in the South died at New Orleans a few days ago Daniel Ealist has been nominated for Congressman by the Republicans of the Seventh Ohio District TirE Denver Republican and the Denver Tribune have been consolidated The new paper wilt be called theTribuneRepublican James B Reilly has been nominated for Congressman by the Democrats of the Thirteenth Pennsylvania District FOREIGN During the twentyfour hours ended at nfne p m on the 7th there were five cholera deaths at Marseilles five at Aries and six at Toulon Tbe e had boeu a slightincrease in tho cases owing to the greatnumber of returning fugitives A disease known as English cholera had broken out in the villages near Blackburn inLancashire Eng and was spreading A severe hurricane aud rainstorm visited Sebastopol Russia on the 7ch Twelve persons were killed and animmense amount of damage was done to proporty In the Linz Greln aud Kirch slag districts near Viennn a storminjured many persons and a large number of buildings were washed away The Queen of Madagascar on the 7th proclaimed negotiations with Franc at an end and ordered her subjects toprepare for war Four shocks of earthquake were felt on tb 7th in a line of Italian towne a few miles southeast of Rome J A racing scull was swamped onQuiviTidi Lake N F a few afternoons ago three of the oaramen being drowned the fourth who was rescued dying the next morning Dispatches of the 7th from Foo Chooasserted that the trouble between France and China was certain to be settled John Russell Young the American Minister waa to be arbitrator Stellmacher an Austrian anarchist who was executed on the Sth at Vienna participated in the brutal murder of a banker named Eiserfc and his two sons and also killed a detective named Block 1 During the twenty four hours ended at nine p m on the evening of the 8tbtwentyfour denths from cholera occurred atMarseilles and two at ToulonJ Lightning on the Sth started aconflagration at VillardLurin France which raged until ninety houses were destroyed There were fourteen deaths fromcholera at Marseilles during the twentyfour hours ended at nine oclock on toe evening of the 10th and four at Toulon and twelve at Gigean It was reported that theepidemic was slowly spreading over France and Italy Captatn Hofer of the Austrian army who won high honors in several cam paigns killed his wife at Fressberg and then took his own life a few days ago Severe thunder storms prevailed throughout England on the 9th At Ac crington hailstones fell three inches long and an inch thick Houses churches ana mills in an area of two miles were wrecked as by a iriofe Two persons were struct dead at Burnley two at Barnsley one at Darwen and one at Nottingham At Pesth many houses were also wrecked The police of Vienna were alarmed on the 10th over the prevalence of incendiary fires and they believed that a conspiracy had been formed to destroy the mainbuildings of the capital Jaslo a town of two thousand people in Austrian Galicia was almost destroyed by fire a few days ago The London agent of the American De partment of Agriculture reported on the llth an improvement in wheat prospects in all the countries of Europe with tha most favorable weather for harvesting Locusts were on the llth reported to have destroyed the orops in Southern Mex ico and Yucatan Thousands of families would have to depend on their Governmsnts for support Inconsequence At Marseilles there were fifteen deaths from cholera in the twentyfour hours ended at nine p m on the llth and three at Toulon Four deaths also occurred at Turin four at Genoa nine at Vogue four at Carcassone and three at Cette The disease was said to exist in thirtytwo towns in Egypt and the suffering among the peorer classes was increasing At ram the heat of the snn on the llth fired a large number of bales of cotton anthey were destroyed before the fire could be stopped Damagel00000 francs Reent heavy rains in Upper Hungary have done much damage Many villages have been almost swept away and some persons drewaed Ar Thh yacht Argo from New York for Cbicacre reached Quebec on the llth it having taen her fojftydaya to make the tup because of rough weather A horrible story is published in the New York Times of the 12th to the effect that the survivors of the Greely party crazed by starvation and cold fed on the dead bodies of their comrades It says that Commander Schleys telegraphic request to becretarv Ubantller lor permission co en close the bodies of the dead in metallic cases at St John for transportation to Hew Yorlc in order to conceal tne appearance oi the victims In fact the coffins contained only bones the flesh having been eaten by the survivors Deiorecne Domes were uiuidu It is further stated that the facts came to Schleys knowledge through the delirious appeal of the first man discovered not to be shot and eaten as Henry waS These ravings led to an investigation and Henrys body was found tocontain a bullet which had shattered one of his ribs The Times avers that the official report of the investigation made by Sohley shows that the flesh of all the victims except those who died of scrofula or scurvy was eaten to keep the survivors alive and tkat when limbs were amputated they were eatenbefore their owners were dead In response to inquiries regarding the truth of thereport Admiral Nichols Acting Secretary of the Navy asserts positively that there was nothing in the Navy Department con firming the story and be doubts its truth Three children named Robert Wood Lou D Wood and Kate Shaw all under ten years of age were burned to death in the barn of Samuel Wood at South Perry O on the 13th They had gone into the barn to smoke to avoid detection and in so doing set the building on fire A fatal case of poisoning occurred near Hot Springs Ark on the 12th A farmer named Russell purchased a quantity of pills as a fever and ague antidote and dosed himself and two children The children are dead and Russell was notexpected to live At Lakeview a suburb of Chicago on the 12th Rev H M Collison pastor of the Fullorton Avenue Presbyterian Church in a fit of insanity caused by church troubles shot his wife killine her instantly and then put a buliet through his own head He was still alive but the chances were against bis recovery Aland slide at Bells Bridge near Stroudsburg Pacaused a serious accident on the Susquehanna Railroad on the 12th A coal train dashed into the debristhrowIrnr the eneine down an embankment En gineer Harris was killed and Fireman Courtright fatally injured At McKeespart Pa on the 12Cb during the temporary absence of their mother two voune Swedish children at tempted to pour a can of carbon oil on the fire in the kitchen stove ana in cne explo sion which followed both1 children were fatally burned The Indiana Prohibition StateCentral Committee at a meeting at Indianapo lis on the 12th decided to put an electoral ticket in the field The ticket has not yet been Denied and the members of the party wi 1 not be pledged to its support imi action is taken simply to enableProhibitionists who desire to vote for St John State aad Special Fairs v The following table gives the time and Dlaee for holdinff the leading agricultural ind industrial exhibitions In the United Suites and Canada i rr fhffiniro Nov 1120 Arkansas Voltey Wichita Kan Sept 30 Arkansas MontrtloOct 1518 Canada tUomuiloD Ottawa Sept 2S2T Canada ProvlnceVToroitoiopt 102U Canada Western lodrjo Sept tJ Canada Central Haniidca Sept dOOct Colorado Uenver Sept Connecticut M criden Sept California Sacramento cpt fcvJJ Delaware Dover faept 2Oct 3 Georjria Mwo ctCWNov L Indiana Indianapolis epv 29Oet 4 IntrState ChicaEOSept 8Oct W Iowa De Monies Aug 29bept 6 L TnnlllnL 813 Kansas Western National Lawrence Sept Kansas City Fat Stock Oct 30Nov 0 Keuiuckv Lexington Augi6W Maine Lewiston Spt Maine Kastern Banror ipt VO Mapsnctausrtte Boston Sept 161 Momana Helena Sept Mich iff an Kaltmaioo Spt I5S0 untnt RNinnn Oct 2124 MichtrarnWestJ rnd Rapids Sept 2227 Minnesota OwatonaaiepuemMinnesota N W Industrial Ml nueap oltf Sept 18 Missouri St Louis Oct olL Mississippi Meridinn Oct 27 Bow YoA Elmira Sept 410 t NewJersy w averry fep i Nebraska Omaha Sept North Carolina lUleurh Oct 12 Ohio Columbus Pept 1 Onio OntrIV Stcctatrnwhurg Sept 5E Ohio iDrtuairial ExhibitionCinclnnad8evt 3Oct 4 m Ohio rSouthcrnl Dayton bent 26Oct 23 Oreiron Salem Sep lft20 Pennsylvania Phiiadclphra Sept S20 Quebec MonrrraJ Anjr 2BSfpt 6 Rhode Island Prnvkloncc Spt 2t27 South Carolma Cnlurabla Nov 11H Southern Inhibition Louisville Ky Au Kf ct 2ft Tennessee Nash vHle Sept 1620 Tciae A trs tin Oct Ml Titate TolrrSpt S13 VorrMiot urijrron Sept 813 Vrrjrtrua HjtbicotidOct 2224 Vest Vrnrroa VTbefLim Sot 813 Vieexwro MsdlUon et J520 iWMMaansm rvorbrru Oslilroiih Sept wrri iawrewes Kan Sent 1 trifa New Grtens IfedMar T i learn pjihua t yfcv Cures Scrofula Erysipelas Pimples and Face Grubs Blotches Boils Tumors let ter Humors Salt Hneum Scald Head Sores Mercurial Diseases Female Weakness and Irregularities Dizziness Loss of ADDetite Juandice Affections of the Liver Indi gestion Biliousnessnyspepsia and General Debility A courso of Burdock Blood Bitters ill satisfy thr od Iurifiet Oi earth Sold liy medicine dealers c Directions in eleven languages PiMCK CO FOSTER MILBURN CO Props Buffalo NY A Good Clerk A good clerk is a prize too rarely found and when found oftenunappreciated When a min has a clerk in whom he can place confidence he may regard himself as extremely fortunate One good clerk will do more and do it better than two poor ones He does not require constant looking alter When be does anything there is no necessity for his employer to do it over again He will always take pains to treat customers well and serve them wich exactly what they want Henever acts as if he owns the wholeestablishment and a very large portion of the world outside of it He is polite unassuming and anxious to forward his employers interests Heissuffltiently levelheaded to recognize the fact that as his employers business increases the better is his own chance for advancement With this end in view he naturally takes a close personal interest in the buisness When a min is fortunate enough to get Buch an employe he would do well to endeavor to retain him It he wants a holiday orrce in a while let him have it He will appreciate it aud make it up to you Should he ask a favor of you grant it as by so doing It will make him regard you as his best friend and the bondbetween you will he one of friendship as business interest Many employes overlook the fact that a go d clerk is a parson of some influence He can Iways bring trade with him and need never be at loss for employment If he leaves one employer he can readily btaio a position with another probably n the same neighborhood and draw trade to his latest employer When you get a good clerk keep him You can feel a sense of security when you go to market or for an evenings recre tton if vou have such a person in charse Your business will be well attended to and even if vou pay him iDerai salary you win una it a uenenc n the long run Ltieyers tauoner MEAT For the Million The undersigned wishes to call the at tention of the people of Oberlin to his con stant supply of the choicest STEAKS and ROASTS from Choice Cattle ALSO MUTTON LAMB Of the lest Q UAL1 TT A supply of SALT and SMOKED MEATS Ind good CLEAN LARD ah i ways on hand U the OLD STAND No 11 South Main Street i 17tf Of Kentucky University Lexinpto oompleto Uii i n ifuntlTDO 1 irlles receive lul Tear from 15 1 Set Of I0OlM I iMletj and is on Icnilng Rail r For rlrculnrmnrl full nirlic t WILBUR B SMJTlILnlBdon kj AGENTS WuWai WANTEC Fr t THE BACKWOODSMEN TheMSt captivating lurrative of tarly Imrle lif pverriten tununzn for Ohl Acnii and sicinil hturfrr ii Bcginnus Agents aic mm idling 10 10 lks imIi We mi an cm in every lon Send tu inns n l V r a Tho W E DIBBLE PUB CO Cincinnati O AGENTSSv Aid for aritr did EflJlllair II OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY TO The CLOT OBERIN OHIO ciTir RESTAURANT NO 7 SOUTH MAINST Having purchased this establish ment 1 propose to conduct the business in FIRSTCLASS STYLE I am a practical Baker of longexperience and Bhall give my personalattention to ail the departments of the work TV EDDIN 33 S And other parties supplied with Plain and Fancy Cakes Families furnished with good wholesome bread A choice assortment of Confections always on hand BOARD By the day or week at my Restaurant and meals at all hours for transient customers Oysters by the quart or served in any style JOHN STANTON FROM THE PRESIDENT OF BAYLOR UNIVERSITY u Independence Texas Sept 26 1882 Gentlemen Ayers Hair Vigor Has been used in my household for thrco 1st To prevent falling out of the hair 2d To prevent too rapid cliauge of color 3d As a dressing It has given entire satisfaction in every Instance Yours respectfully Wil Carev Crane AYERS HAIR VIGOR is entirely free from uncleanly dangerous or Injurioussubstances It prevents tho hair from turning gray restores gray hair to its original color prevents haldncss preserves the hair and piomotes its growth cures dandruff and all diseases of tho hair and scalp and is at tho same time a very superior and desirable dressing prepared nv DrJCAyer Co Lowell Mass 1 Sold by all Druggists Rough on Rats Clear out rats mice roaches flies nnts bed hues skunks cliipnnmkb gophurs lbuDruggists Heart Pains Palnitntlon Drousicfil Sucllinira Dizzinc38 Indigestion rTUlitchc Sleeplessness cured by v tu s iicimn neiiewcr Rough on Corns Ask for Wells Hough on Corns 15c Quick complete cure tiaru or soic corns wans ions BaohnPaibi Quick complc euro all Kidney Blirlder ntiil Uiinarv Dicanei ScuMmc irrilat Stone Gravel Catmih ol the Bladder fUUO Druggists I Rough on Dentists Tooth Powder ootli Refreshing Harmlcfs Llogant Clean and Fragruut 15c OrugKiats Thin People Wells Heal tli rtencwor restore hen 1th and vigor curei Dyspeptiu Impotence Sexual Debility 1001 BedBagsFliesFlies ronchos ants hedbuga rats mice gDphers chipmunks cleared out by Hough on ilata 16c I Mothers If you are failing Ijivken worn out and nervous use Wells Health Kcnewer J100 Druggists Lifo Preserver tr you are losiiitr your grip on life try WojIs llealh Rjnowcr Goes direct to woak spots Rough on Toothaohe InBtant relict for Neuralgia Toothache Paccacho Ask for iiough on Toothache 15 and 5 cents Pretty Women Ladpg who would cetain freshness andvivacity Dont leil to try We la HealthRouuwer Rough on Itch Rouftrhon Itch cures humors eruptions rinirworin tetior bult rheum frosted luct chilblains Night Sweats Headache Fever chills malaria dyspepsia cured byWella ilcalih iienewer 1 The Hope of the Nation ChlMrn plow in devolonmiMit mmv ncraw inanu delicalo use Wells Health Henew Roueh on Pain Cnres colic crump diarrhoea external for aches pains sprains headache nnuriilg rheumatism t or man or beast 26 and 50c Rouch on Pain Plaster Porous ami strengthen in im Droved tho lfMt lor backitche naius in cheat or s rheumatism neuralgia 25 cents Drnccists or mail 19ly Snow Carda Cards House to Rent House for Sale Rooms to Rent Rooms and Board Board Piano to Rent etc for sale at the Nkws oilice 18 DELAWARE OHIO mm CAD SELL BEST TEA Strawberry Ham Boneless Ham Breakfast Bacon Pickled Salmon Penny Mackerel Fat Pound Mackerel Smoked Halibut Bologna Sausage Hamlette Dried Beef Crockery Glassware Potatoes String Beans Bananas Cabbage Onions BOSTON BAKED BEANS Canned Soups Canned Salmon Canned Mackerel Canned Beef Canned Oysters fiAnnEn k m ai air t h a Kn OF ALL IZXXTDOS Feed Corn Meal Corn Flour Corn Oats CHICHEIf fis And many other things good to eat and use including always the BABY CARRIAGES We have added to our stock of Hardware etc a full line of BABY CAHHIAGrES We are agents for the celebrated Whitny Carriage and areofferingthem at much lower priies than they were ever sold at before and every one fully warranted Carter Hatch 6tf 0BERLTN OHIO NEW MILLINEKY Mrs J M HOED Extends a cordial invitation to her SPRING MILLINERS Her stock is complete comprisinp everything new and novel that the season affords Ladies please and show you our goods No 3 West College St OBERLIN OHIO PITTSBURGH HMb LOLLEGE AND PITTSBURGH CONSERVATORY OF MUSiGHCO full Music Lessons for 18 Dhtlriol KIH Llhanil Arti Mutif Klnotili Modern rfiiiiiit lv Vntrnl 1 1 enlttif til hirlv tiiihirs Modinit liirj Tliirsli Hi ur onm in I llifori nmklui IliKiKiiiUnta LowYiKu DR I C PERSHING Pittsburgh Pa YlGo IMPORTED VEKY CHEAP the ladies of display of Oberlin and vicinity to call we will be pleased to meet you

81 5 TERMS 150 PER TEAR OBERLIN LORAIN CO 0 FRIDAY AUGUST 15 1884 VOLUME XXV NUMBER 25 DIRECTORY POST OFflOE DEPASTMENT OFFICK hours from 7 a m to S p m Open Saturday night until fl30 MAILS LSATI Bone Fst 860 x M u40rM 8ir MwWMt 715 1 M 4rH Qolnl to IlttaOeld Wellington 600 A H If AIL DISTRIBUTED from Fast HO From Wot 700 a M 10001 M 115P From Wellington 500 T H Money order department open fortraaaclon of buainess from 7 ft m to 7 p m BATTE0AD LAKE 8HORK A MICHIOAM SOUTHERN K Standard or fiuih Meridian Time GOING EAST No 24 BUFFALO A000MM0DA HOS Loaves Obcrliu 918 a m arrivea at Cleveland 1036 a in So12 0HI0AQJ4 ST L0TJlBtirfES8 Leaves berli a 1242 p m arrives atCleveland 155 pm go 2 NEW YORK EXPRES8Toaves Oberlin 8J4 p m arrives at Cleveland 940 p m So 72 WAY FREIGHT Leaves Oberlin 936 GOING WEST Ho 2 MICHIGAN AUOOJJMODATrOHLeaves Cleveland tuu a m arrives at Oberlin 718 a m Ho n TOLEDO EXPRESS Leaves Cleveland 8 2li p m arrives at Oberlin 438 p m Ho 9 PA0IFT0 EIPRG88Leaves Cleveland tLJ p m leaves Oberlin at 747 n m Ho 73 WAY FREIGHT Leaves Oberlin 750 AI J YOUNG Agent county ornoEEs Prosecuting Attorney D 3 Nye Auditor O Koot Treasure Q H Robblnl Clerk II 3 Lewis Sherif Calvin Ensign Recorder W E Cahoot Probate Judge H I Unman Surveyor T C Bowen CommiesionertV S MillB E P Burell W M Crandall Infirmary Director 1 8 Straw 8 D Bacon Bradford Race EUSSIA TOWNSHIP 7 run teen T H Mnmford S B Dudley J M Worcesler OUr lb W B Dnrand Treasurer Edwin Rojral AsxessorH O Swilt Constables Alien Nowell Geo VF Gibson J B A bell Justices of the PeaaB W Locke Joel Myers Arden Dale OBERLIN VILLAGE MayorC A Motcnlf nouncilmen Elwlo Kcgnl W G Ballnt1ne C II Favel J S Peck A Deming W M MitclieU OfrkW P M Gilbert Treasurer O F Carter MarshallsKttc L Newton Chief Engineer Hire Department TWillonshby 0BEELIN PUBLIC S0H00LS Members of Board of Education Judson Smith CHChurchill E J Goodrich WBDurand E P Johnson H G Carpenter OFFICERS OF BOA ED President Jiidaon Smith C Urk W B Uurand Treamtrer B J Goodrich Stipe in tend en t of Schools G W Wite 0BEELIN 0HUE0HES First Cong Chdroh NortnwcBt corner ol Main abd Lorain streets Rev James Brand Pastor derviccs H30 a m and 7 p m Wookly prayer mooting Friday afternoon oclock and every Thursday evening in the Church Chapel Sunday School 9 amPastors residence No la South Profoaaorst Second Cong CntJRon South side Wont College Btrcct Pulpit supplied hv Profs J M Ellis Judson Smith and G FWrightServices 1030 a m and 7 p m Weekly prayer meeting on Thursday evening in the lecture room Sunday School 9 a m Christ PEi ChctroQ No 63 and Rectory No 05 South Main St Holy Communion the first Sunday of each month and upon tho Holy days of tho Eclcsiastical year Sunday school 80 a m Seats free Baptist Church No 3 East LorainStRev Geo W Noad Pastor Sorvicoa 1030am and 7 nra Sunday School 13 m Young Peoples Prayer Meetin k Sunday at 545 p m Prayer meeting Thursday evening Pastor residence 16 East Lorain street First Methodist Kpiscopal CHURCH No 68 South Main st Rev W P McDowell Pastor ino insn ii m and TKMu m Seats free Anndiiv School 9 a m Prayer mcctingB Sun nvnnino at a nclock in north Clas6room forold folkn in south Classroom for young people Weekiv Prayer meeting inurm evening PaBtora rebiilenoe 71 South M treet RDST M E CHORCH South Water St between Mill and Grovoland Key Scott Ward Pax tor Resiacico No Servicos 1030 a m 3 p m 7 pm Sabbath School 2 p m Weoky Prayer meetingThurartav evening Ofllcial Churoh meeting every Monday eveninjt BUSINESS 0AEDS A TTORNS y S JH LANG AttornoyatLaw Notary Pub 1 io and General Land Insurance andPenlion Aitent No 8 Worcesters Block I A WEBSTER Attorney atLaw Notary Publio and Real Estate Agent Oflce ovcrl and 8 South Mainstcert Oberlin Ohio I A Webster Ely Block Elyria a GEO P A CHAS A METCALF Attorneys at Law Notaries Publio and Real Estate Agents Collodions oromptly maue ui over the Post Oftino Uberlin O 18 CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK of Oberlin Buy and Sell GovernmcntBonds Coin and Coupons Korotirn and Domestic Exchange tfraiu ivcn upou au imris hih C U Randall Cashier M Btonk President MA TUSOVM Barber Shop College Place Lt Room No 3 College Place Draying Moving Pianos a specialty O MERLIN COLLEGE WRITINGDEPTThorough inHtiuction given in Practical and Ornamental Pi niinsbip andBookkeeping Rooms over No 14 West College st j5ly Principal DRKS8 VAkiya Miss R A HOFFMAN Dress and Cloak Maker No 1 College Place Oherlin Ohio Cutting and fitting bv accurate moasure and original donigniiiK Bpeciaities 35 ly VKOUGlliTH JU GARDNER t CO Druggists rc scrijitions accurately compounded at all hours r if HARMON Dealer in Drugs Modi J cines Penumes Toilet Articles LampB W fillffgf Sr HG MUST ED Dentist Office ovor No 8 W est College Street First stairway East of PostOlucoOler1ln O 48tf F StlUlALL Dcntint First door west i of th PostOflloe Gives gas when ho Artj B A RD WA RX i smvna and Tin Ware Solo Agents for Btowarts Stoves Job work done in tho best manner rTEKD4 EDWARDS Dealers in Stoves Tin V anil Sheet Iron Ware and Hardware of kinds Merchants Exchange North Malr V llOLTEH Watchmaker Engraver and dealer in Wiitchcs Clocks Jewelry and prwaro No 2 West College st 37 lirXRY STAJSLJCS CPA V EL Proprietor City Stables No North Main Ht Oberlin O Good Team furnished at all hours and atreasoniai rates ma cniNsn Y er in Steam EnKine and Steam Boili Doalerin Second Hand BuilersandED Norwalk Obio 1 PHYSICIANS DR J AUSTIN Office and Residence No 15 East College street Office hours from 3X to 10 a H S to 8 r M and 7 to 8 evening 1 tf r c bunce Physician andSurthe Kew Brick Block geon Ofllci over Streators store Residence No 5 South rrressor street Calls in the country tiny or n ight prom p ily ataMded to 7 Bm Dun C JUMP Physician ard Surzeon fllce In Carpenters Block ovei Johnsons more fllce hours from 3 to 6 p mResidence 8A North Main street 8ly D Sun PKNNIMAN Phvsician and rtreon Office and residence No 33 West Lollege htreet 44 ly P17BLI8HID ETIBT THIDAT AT No 27 South Malnst Oberlin O EDITOR AND PROPRIITOB TTm FWH it Livi Papih miitt tin ni Local ami County Nvs Letters irom the People everyday 1 optc neeriui Letrers Irom lor residents and tizens temnorarilv ohscnt Editorial Commcna in Current Events and a ted amount oi arefnllv Selected Matter Its contents are to it great extent writtenexpressly for its columns competent iocai orrespunacnts at every mportant point in the Coipty keep the renders ntormedof everv veut transDirinur ui their re spective localities tourt iroceeuings ana otner joanty ieat News fully and accurately reported Oberlin and Cleveland Markets corrected every week It is Republican in pi 1 no pie but not offensively artisan progressive in all that relates to the uildirtr ud 01 the business morals and nublic sentiment of the community and aggressive in respect to those things detrhnentl to public welfare Terms o Subaoidptlon t 150 per year Parts of a year in prtiportion Single copies 5 Address changed at the pleasure of the subscri ber No extra charge for postage ArlvTtiBkmnntB of an unobjectionable character inserted on favorable terms Rates made known on application to the Proprietor Transient advertisements cash In advance Bills for regular advertising nreannteri nnar terly Job Prlntinar The Niws Opfic is well equipped with Firstclass Steam Presses and good material and is prepared to executeanything in the printing Hue from a one line card to aiun sneei poster Facts are Stubborn Things is there anything in any of the num erous advertisements of the Royal Bak ing fowdcr to show that the Koyai does not use Ammonia and Tartaric Acid as cheap substitutes for Cream of Tartar ur is there any charge or the slightest insinuation in those advertisements that Clevelands Superior Baking Pow der contains anything but the purest Grape Cream of Tartar and Bicarbonate of Soda with a small portion of flour hs a preservative Ammonia ana Tartaric Acid produce a cheap leavening gas which is not to be compared in the practical test o baking with the desirable Carbonic Acid gas generated by the exclusive use 01 tee expensive u ream 01 ltirtar Use Clevelands Superior Bakin Powder and judge for yourself of its superiority THE 00MMANDEEIN0HIEF THE G A B OF Gen John Konntz of Toledo 0 The Grand Army of the Republic at ita late reunion held in Minneapolis Minn on the sixth ballot elected Gen John Konntz of Toledo O itsCommanderinChief for the ensuing year Gen Kountz succeeds Commander Beath and is the youngest official head of the G A R ever elected by that or ganization Gen Kountz is an Ohio man by birth and residence having been born Lucas county March 25 1846 In 1862 upon the organization of the Thirty1 seventh Ohio Volunteers he enlisted in that regiment as a drummer boy and bravely conducted himself in a number of heavy battleB His regiment was in ihe charge upon the heights ofMissionary Ridge when a friend of young Konntss fell at hi side killed The drummer boy threw away his drum seized the musket and Bnrprised bib comrades by an activity and bravery in that bloody struggle that would have done credit to the most fearless soldier Near the close of the engagement be fell so severely wounded in the leg that amputation became necessary After the close of the rebellion bereturned home an orphan with only a sister to greet his coming In time hiB sterling qualities as a business manattracted public admiration and thevoters of his native county honored him with its Treasurership for two years ai d for a like period be was Commit sioner of Records He then entered theinsurance business and is now the proprietor of a large and successful agency in Toledo Ever since the organization of the G A R in 1866 Mr Konntz has been ideniifitd with it in an active capacity Beginr iag with the Adjutancy of h b Post he was then advanced to itsCommand ership then successively to the Assistant Quartermaster General and Commandership of the Department of Ohio and lastly to the bigest honor of the G A R the CommanderinChief of the order for the United States Wide Awake D Lothrop Co Boston Mass 300 per year The Wide Awake for August contains the lastpart of Elizabeth Stuart Phelpss story A Jlrave Girl The opening story Is for girls and an excellent one in its lesson The boys have in their turn an amusinar hunting story Oslts The months Illustration of Wordsworths poem is exquisite Our RoyalNeighbors at Sandringham is the name of a story about the children of the Prince of Wales This pretty midsummer number is also adorned with poems aud pictu es about the fairies of tho season Domorest Illustrated Monthly Mag azine for September is an extremely useful and eutertaiDing number The tiles and poems are excellent and The Enelish Cathedrals The Romance of the Century and Seeing New York by Jenny June are arliclea of unusual interest There is much that wilt prove v rv useful in the household in the way of fancywork and fashion aud the ill trationsadd greatly to the attractiveness of this number Medea a hne oil painting from the original by N Sichel forms the frontispiece NEWSSUKSIABY Important Intelligence from All Parts DOMESTIC Two sqcadbons of United States cavait ry descended upon Oklahomn Paynes camp at Rock Fails I T on the 7th and arrested the leaders and started them off for Port Smith The women children and rrew offenders wereoscorted to the Kansas lino Tho boardinghouse drugstore and some other cheap structures were burned and not a vestige of the settlement wai permitted to remain i Two htnkrs were killed and a third was fatally injured by the fall of twentyfive tons of topcoal in a colliery atShenandoah Pa a few days ago The defendant in a Mother Hubbard dress case at Omaha was dismissed on the 7th deference to public opinion causing the ChiefofPoHce not to prosecute The style of dress involved was being worn more than ever Tax City of San Francisco embarked Nineteen Chinese lepers on the 7th foi their native land giving each five dollars tfid paying full fare While going to campmeeting a few days ago Sam Faulkner and Henry Allen accosted the two Wood all brothers neai Predonia Tex Firing began Allenbeing shot dead the Woodalls being mor tally hurt and Faulkner might possibly recover An American railway oompanyoperating in Mexico received information on the 7th that diplomatic relations between that country and England which weresuspended on the death of Maximilian had been felly restored The Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America in session at Chicago on the 7th elected Rev James M Cleary ofWisconsin to the Presidency About a dozen white citizens of Fairfax Va on receiving information recently that a young lady was being followed home In the country by a negro rode onl and captured the villain who was given one hundred lashes on the bare back Toe iron mills at Pittsburgh on the 7th were employing 7000 men less than last yeax and the depression was greater tha for several years GovxjtKOR Sheldon of New Mexico issued a proclamation on the 7th for the inspection of cattle no matter from what aectton before they were permitted to enter the Territory At the session of the National Christian Sunday School Association at Indianapolis on the 7th A R Benson of Indiana was elected President and F M Green oJ Ohio Secretary The Secretary of the Interior received word at Washington on the 7th that one thousand Piegan Indians at the Black eel Agency in Montana were actuallystarving The death rate was large I TffiB Grand Jury at Petersbnrg Va oe theTtfc indicted the officers and several employes of the wrecked Planters Bank for misdemeanor or for felony Nkaa Wilkesbarre Pa a few days agt two Brothers David and Solomon Slusher were suffocated by firedamp i A niecoMOTrvE struck a carriage on 4 the 8th cshtaining five persons who werereturning from a funeral at Connors Station Pa killing four persons and the twe horses and demolishing the vehicle DnitmO the seven days ended on the 8th therVwere 276 business failures in th TJnlSed States against 241 the previous seven dnys and 160 for thecorrespondingi period e5 1883 I In an attempt to beat bis recordJayEyeSee at Buffalo the 8th trottedwithout a skip in 210S A runaway horse on the 8th draggedexSheriff Col bath and Mrs Leatherman onto the railway track at Lima O and a switching engine killed both of them the horse escaping The main shaft of the monument tc George Washington at the National capi tal on the 8th reached a height of fivehundred feet and preparations for erecting the roof would be commenced It was announced on the 8th that in the neighborhood of Point Pleasant W Va three farmers at different points had suf fered the loss of wheat fields from fires set by Incendiaries Cokb operators in Pennsylvania a loud in their complaints about the dullness ef the trade Overproduction is the cause of the present depression Try AS fever and pleuro pneumonia ap peared on the 8th among the herds in the vicinity of Lancaster Pa The infected herds had been quarantined Holmes Lafferty Co dealers in ilive stock at Pittsburgh madeassignments a few days ago with liabilities ol flOOOOO The Penn Bank suspension caused the failure i Owb hundred and fifty men In the La Belle Nail Mill at Wheeling weredischarged on the 8th the millownersdeciding to procure their steel bars from Pittsburgh doing away with their forge department If other mills adopted this plan five thousand persona would be thrown oat of employment The new moTwnent had caused consternation at Wheeling i The Postoffice Department is making preparations for a fine exhibit of postal supplies at the New Orleans Exhibition which will soon be forwarded to that city Dorothea Gordon was on the 8th found hanging in the woods near Mount Carmel Ky with a rope made from her dress Foul play was suspected A severe shock of earthquake was felt along the Atlantic coast on the 10th alittle after two p m extending fromPhiladelphia to Portland Me and as far in land as Cleveland The shock lasted about ten seconds and caused very sorious alarm particularly in New Tork City No serious damage was done though houses were badly shaken some ceilings were cracked and the people woreterribly frightened A second shock was felt in some places Br the falling in of some walls on the 10th during the progross of a Are at Car letsburg Ky three men Bob Miller John Graham and David Kinner were killed and a number were seriously wounded The damage to property amounted to 76 000 A tilekiln collapsed near Lima O the other dav burying Ave workmen two of whom were mortally injured At Arlington Tox on the 9th R A Lindsay entered the house of his step father James A Wright and shot him dead in bed Then he killed hisstepsister Fanny fired several ineffective shots at his fleeing sister and escaped to the woeds The cause for the murders was a mystery Two brothers William and Thomas Jennings aged respectively ten and twelve years quarreled recently near Pikoton Mo when the younger plunged a knife into the neck of the other severing the juguhar vein and causing death in a few minutes The Missouri River boat MarthaStephens sank on the morning of the 9thbetween Bonneville and Arrow Rock five persons being drowned and two scalded to death For posting Socialist proclamations three men were fined five dollars each at New York on the 9th A notoriousCommunist paid the fines The citizens of Lnmberton O on tho 10th drovo from town a large family named Myers suspected of various crimes and burned their houso when they loft The Agricultural Department ntWashIntrton aimouncfid on tho 9th an improve ment in the corulrtiou of cotton since last repwrt and that the corn average was hitrher than in any August since 1SS0 Oais had faHen off a fraction wliilobarlewaud buckwheat was up to the average Tbeiniroewcts for larjge crops of tobacco andpotato3S were favoraM fS ouacrrowwjnsa on tho lOth came oat of ttm tesbee on an island in Nigani rexltaiHa Brangr a watch loape Into the rapids and was hurried over the Horseshoe fall An iron firm of Louisville on the 9tb sent circulars throughout the country urging that all furnaces be banked for four weeks with a hope of increasing prices Showers Brothers bedstead factory at Bloomington Ind was consumed by fire the other afternoon causing a loss inexcess of 80000 The employment of large numbers of 1 Canadians on American vessels on the lakes led to legislation In Congress The acting Secretary of the Treasury on the 9th ordered inspectors neither to renew nor issue licenses to officers of steamvessels who are not citizens of the United States Another Bhock of earthquake was felt in the villages along the south side ol Long Island on the afternoon of the 11th It was not as heavy as tha day previous but sufficient to cause excitement A shock was also felt at Mount Washington in Massachusetts which awakened the people i A Brooklyn streetcar was struck by a train at a crossing a few days ago the conductor being killed and five passenger wounded one seriously John Butler a farmer of Hanover County Va shot his wife fatally a few days ago He had been beating a child and his wife interfered and he turnedupon her She had him arrested but heescaped from the officer and returning home shot his wife At Switz City Ind the other night George Rankin aged nineteenaccidentally shot his brother thirteen years old George then shot himself through the breast and died soon after while his mothers death was momentarilyexpected In Lewis County Term two Mormonelders who were holding meetings were Bhot dead by masked men a few days ago and a warning was given to others to leave th country The Wall Street Bank of New Tor closod its doors on the 11th The shortage was said to be about 300000 and wat caused by the defalcation of the cashier J P Dickinson Since August 1 the United StatesTreasury has paid out 2003000 in gold leaving the amount above the reserve point13600000 Another slaughter of horsethieves by cowboys took place a few days ago in th Muscleshell region in Montana nine rob bers being killed It was stated that then was never a period in the history of ttw Territory when so much horsethieving was going on and the citizens weredetermined to effectually stop it Fully fifty thieves had been hanged or shot in the pagl month Hart Allen of Macon Ga alandowner was killed the 11th by John Taylor his tenanted uring a quarrel aboul the rent One portion of the Minnesota State Cap itol building at St Paul has beenpronounced unsafe and persons are prohibit ed from entering it i Thomas Bolar and R W McHatton two old and respected citizens of Elmweod Mo were fatally injured a few dayB ag by a runaway team John Holcomb was arrested at St Louii on the 11th and upon bemgsearchedseveral fifty dollar counterfeit bills new and crisp were found The boiler of an Ohio River propoRai exploded on the llth opposite KadJson Ind killing the engineer A mstowSu was on a raft some distance away wa thrown into the river and drowned j Only three eig bit hs o the rail furnaces of the United States are now in operation At twentythree leading clear inghouses in the UBitedtatesthe exchaDgas during the week ended onthe 9th aggregated 724 871993 against 744032494 the previous week As compared withthe correspond ing period of 1883 the clearings showed decrease of 104 per cent PERSONAL AMD POLITICAL General Butler on the 6fch sent a let ter to the New York Sun stating that h intendod to stand by the nominations ol the Greeubackers and An ti Monopolists for President and hoped everybody would vote for him who thought it was the be thing to do The New Jersey Republicans met in State Convention at Trenton on the 6th and nominated candidates forPresidential electors Congressional nominations were mad as follows on the 7th Republican Ohio First District Benjamin Butterworth Second Charles E Brown Eighth Judge Little Indiana Fourth District John O Cravens Iowa Third District D B Henderson renominated Soutli Carolina Fifth District W H Weller Democratic Ohio Fourth District C M Anderson Virginia Tenth District J Randolph Tucker renominated Nortfc Carolina Seventh District Kerr Craig Georgia Tenth District Henry K Harris Pennsylvania Twenty first District C E Boyle renominated The National Dental Association at Sar atoga on the 8th elected George H Cash ingtoo of Chicago President and decided to meet next year at Minneapolis John Jourdan tho notorious burglai who robbed the Middletown Conn Sav ings Bank of 43000 was captured in New York on the Sth The Bear Thetis and Alert of the Greelv expedition arrived at Governors Island N Y on the 8th and were received by Secretary Lincoln Generals Sheridan and Hancock and other officials the forts firing a funeral salute The bodies of the dead would lie in state in the hospital un1 til removed by friends Congressional nominations were made on the Sth as follows Democratic South Carolina Second District George DTillman Third D Wyatt Aiken NorthCarolina Eighth District W H BL Cowles Pennsylvania Twentyseventh District William L Scott Greeubackers Kansas Fourth District M D Tenuy Dr J P Hammond rector of St Georges Church nt Baltimore dropped dead a few days ago from heartdisease The Greenbackers of the Seventeenth Illinois District have nominated Elder James M Morgan for Congressman ii B Elliott formerly a member of Congress from Sonth Carolina andconsidered the most eloquent negro orator in the South died at New Orleans a few days ago Daniel Ealist has been nominated for Congressman by the Republicans of the Seventh Ohio District TirE Denver Republican and the Denver Tribune have been consolidated The new paper wilt be called theTribuneRepublican James B Reilly has been nominated for Congressman by the Democrats of the Thirteenth Pennsylvania District FOREIGN During the twentyfour hours ended at nfne p m on the 7th there were five cholera deaths at Marseilles five at Aries and six at Toulon Tbe e had boeu a slightincrease in tho cases owing to the greatnumber of returning fugitives A disease known as English cholera had broken out in the villages near Blackburn inLancashire Eng and was spreading A severe hurricane aud rainstorm visited Sebastopol Russia on the 7ch Twelve persons were killed and animmense amount of damage was done to proporty In the Linz Greln aud Kirch slag districts near Viennn a storminjured many persons and a large number of buildings were washed away The Queen of Madagascar on the 7th proclaimed negotiations with Franc at an end and ordered her subjects toprepare for war Four shocks of earthquake were felt on tb 7th in a line of Italian towne a few miles southeast of Rome J A racing scull was swamped onQuiviTidi Lake N F a few afternoons ago three of the oaramen being drowned the fourth who was rescued dying the next morning Dispatches of the 7th from Foo Chooasserted that the trouble between France and China was certain to be settled John Russell Young the American Minister waa to be arbitrator Stellmacher an Austrian anarchist who was executed on the Sth at Vienna participated in the brutal murder of a banker named Eiserfc and his two sons and also killed a detective named Block 1 During the twenty four hours ended at nine p m on the evening of the 8tbtwentyfour denths from cholera occurred atMarseilles and two at ToulonJ Lightning on the Sth started aconflagration at VillardLurin France which raged until ninety houses were destroyed There were fourteen deaths fromcholera at Marseilles during the twentyfour hours ended at nine oclock on toe evening of the 10th and four at Toulon and twelve at Gigean It was reported that theepidemic was slowly spreading over France and Italy Captatn Hofer of the Austrian army who won high honors in several cam paigns killed his wife at Fressberg and then took his own life a few days ago Severe thunder storms prevailed throughout England on the 9th At Ac crington hailstones fell three inches long and an inch thick Houses churches ana mills in an area of two miles were wrecked as by a iriofe Two persons were struct dead at Burnley two at Barnsley one at Darwen and one at Nottingham At Pesth many houses were also wrecked The police of Vienna were alarmed on the 10th over the prevalence of incendiary fires and they believed that a conspiracy had been formed to destroy the mainbuildings of the capital Jaslo a town of two thousand people in Austrian Galicia was almost destroyed by fire a few days ago The London agent of the American De partment of Agriculture reported on the llth an improvement in wheat prospects in all the countries of Europe with tha most favorable weather for harvesting Locusts were on the llth reported to have destroyed the orops in Southern Mex ico and Yucatan Thousands of families would have to depend on their Governmsnts for support Inconsequence At Marseilles there were fifteen deaths from cholera in the twentyfour hours ended at nine p m on the llth and three at Toulon Four deaths also occurred at Turin four at Genoa nine at Vogue four at Carcassone and three at Cette The disease was said to exist in thirtytwo towns in Egypt and the suffering among the peorer classes was increasing At ram the heat of the snn on the llth fired a large number of bales of cotton anthey were destroyed before the fire could be stopped Damagel00000 francs Reent heavy rains in Upper Hungary have done much damage Many villages have been almost swept away and some persons drewaed Ar Thh yacht Argo from New York for Cbicacre reached Quebec on the llth it having taen her fojftydaya to make the tup because of rough weather A horrible story is published in the New York Times of the 12th to the effect that the survivors of the Greely party crazed by starvation and cold fed on the dead bodies of their comrades It says that Commander Schleys telegraphic request to becretarv Ubantller lor permission co en close the bodies of the dead in metallic cases at St John for transportation to Hew Yorlc in order to conceal tne appearance oi the victims In fact the coffins contained only bones the flesh having been eaten by the survivors Deiorecne Domes were uiuidu It is further stated that the facts came to Schleys knowledge through the delirious appeal of the first man discovered not to be shot and eaten as Henry waS These ravings led to an investigation and Henrys body was found tocontain a bullet which had shattered one of his ribs The Times avers that the official report of the investigation made by Sohley shows that the flesh of all the victims except those who died of scrofula or scurvy was eaten to keep the survivors alive and tkat when limbs were amputated they were eatenbefore their owners were dead In response to inquiries regarding the truth of thereport Admiral Nichols Acting Secretary of the Navy asserts positively that there was nothing in the Navy Department con firming the story and be doubts its truth Three children named Robert Wood Lou D Wood and Kate Shaw all under ten years of age were burned to death in the barn of Samuel Wood at South Perry O on the 13th They had gone into the barn to smoke to avoid detection and in so doing set the building on fire A fatal case of poisoning occurred near Hot Springs Ark on the 12th A farmer named Russell purchased a quantity of pills as a fever and ague antidote and dosed himself and two children The children are dead and Russell was notexpected to live At Lakeview a suburb of Chicago on the 12th Rev H M Collison pastor of the Fullorton Avenue Presbyterian Church in a fit of insanity caused by church troubles shot his wife killine her instantly and then put a buliet through his own head He was still alive but the chances were against bis recovery Aland slide at Bells Bridge near Stroudsburg Pacaused a serious accident on the Susquehanna Railroad on the 12th A coal train dashed into the debristhrowIrnr the eneine down an embankment En gineer Harris was killed and Fireman Courtright fatally injured At McKeespart Pa on the 12Cb during the temporary absence of their mother two voune Swedish children at tempted to pour a can of carbon oil on the fire in the kitchen stove ana in cne explo sion which followed both1 children were fatally burned The Indiana Prohibition StateCentral Committee at a meeting at Indianapo lis on the 12th decided to put an electoral ticket in the field The ticket has not yet been Denied and the members of the party wi 1 not be pledged to its support imi action is taken simply to enableProhibitionists who desire to vote for St John State aad Special Fairs v The following table gives the time and Dlaee for holdinff the leading agricultural ind industrial exhibitions In the United Suites and Canada i rr fhffiniro Nov 1120 Arkansas Voltey Wichita Kan Sept 30 Arkansas MontrtloOct 1518 Canada tUomuiloD Ottawa Sept 2S2T Canada ProvlnceVToroitoiopt 102U Canada Western lodrjo Sept tJ Canada Central Haniidca Sept dOOct Colorado Uenver Sept Connecticut M criden Sept California Sacramento cpt fcvJJ Delaware Dover faept 2Oct 3 Georjria Mwo ctCWNov L Indiana Indianapolis epv 29Oet 4 IntrState ChicaEOSept 8Oct W Iowa De Monies Aug 29bept 6 L TnnlllnL 813 Kansas Western National Lawrence Sept Kansas City Fat Stock Oct 30Nov 0 Keuiuckv Lexington Augi6W Maine Lewiston Spt Maine Kastern Banror ipt VO Mapsnctausrtte Boston Sept 161 Momana Helena Sept Mich iff an Kaltmaioo Spt I5S0 untnt RNinnn Oct 2124 MichtrarnWestJ rnd Rapids Sept 2227 Minnesota OwatonaaiepuemMinnesota N W Industrial Ml nueap oltf Sept 18 Missouri St Louis Oct olL Mississippi Meridinn Oct 27 Bow YoA Elmira Sept 410 t NewJersy w averry fep i Nebraska Omaha Sept North Carolina lUleurh Oct 12 Ohio Columbus Pept 1 Onio OntrIV Stcctatrnwhurg Sept 5E Ohio iDrtuairial ExhibitionCinclnnad8evt 3Oct 4 m Ohio rSouthcrnl Dayton bent 26Oct 23 Oreiron Salem Sep lft20 Pennsylvania Phiiadclphra Sept S20 Quebec MonrrraJ Anjr 2BSfpt 6 Rhode Island Prnvkloncc Spt 2t27 South Carolma Cnlurabla Nov 11H Southern Inhibition Louisville Ky Au Kf ct 2ft Tennessee Nash vHle Sept 1620 Tciae A trs tin Oct Ml Titate TolrrSpt S13 VorrMiot urijrron Sept 813 Vrrjrtrua HjtbicotidOct 2224 Vest Vrnrroa VTbefLim Sot 813 Vieexwro MsdlUon et J520 iWMMaansm rvorbrru Oslilroiih Sept wrri iawrewes Kan Sent 1 trifa New Grtens IfedMar T i learn pjihua t yfcv Cures Scrofula Erysipelas Pimples and Face Grubs Blotches Boils Tumors let ter Humors Salt Hneum Scald Head Sores Mercurial Diseases Female Weakness and Irregularities Dizziness Loss of ADDetite Juandice Affections of the Liver Indi gestion Biliousnessnyspepsia and General Debility A courso of Burdock Blood Bitters ill satisfy thr od Iurifiet Oi earth Sold liy medicine dealers c Directions in eleven languages PiMCK CO FOSTER MILBURN CO Props Buffalo NY A Good Clerk A good clerk is a prize too rarely found and when found oftenunappreciated When a min has a clerk in whom he can place confidence he may regard himself as extremely fortunate One good clerk will do more and do it better than two poor ones He does not require constant looking alter When be does anything there is no necessity for his employer to do it over again He will always take pains to treat customers well and serve them wich exactly what they want Henever acts as if he owns the wholeestablishment and a very large portion of the world outside of it He is polite unassuming and anxious to forward his employers interests Heissuffltiently levelheaded to recognize the fact that as his employers business increases the better is his own chance for advancement With this end in view he naturally takes a close personal interest in the buisness When a min is fortunate enough to get Buch an employe he would do well to endeavor to retain him It he wants a holiday orrce in a while let him have it He will appreciate it aud make it up to you Should he ask a favor of you grant it as by so doing It will make him regard you as his best friend and the bondbetween you will he one of friendship as business interest Many employes overlook the fact that a go d clerk is a parson of some influence He can Iways bring trade with him and need never be at loss for employment If he leaves one employer he can readily btaio a position with another probably n the same neighborhood and draw trade to his latest employer When you get a good clerk keep him You can feel a sense of security when you go to market or for an evenings recre tton if vou have such a person in charse Your business will be well attended to and even if vou pay him iDerai salary you win una it a uenenc n the long run Ltieyers tauoner MEAT For the Million The undersigned wishes to call the at tention of the people of Oberlin to his con stant supply of the choicest STEAKS and ROASTS from Choice Cattle ALSO MUTTON LAMB Of the lest Q UAL1 TT A supply of SALT and SMOKED MEATS Ind good CLEAN LARD ah i ways on hand U the OLD STAND No 11 South Main Street i 17tf Of Kentucky University Lexinpto oompleto Uii i n ifuntlTDO 1 irlles receive lul Tear from 15 1 Set Of I0OlM I iMletj and is on Icnilng Rail r For rlrculnrmnrl full nirlic t WILBUR B SMJTlILnlBdon kj AGENTS WuWai WANTEC Fr t THE BACKWOODSMEN TheMSt captivating lurrative of tarly Imrle lif pverriten tununzn for Ohl Acnii and sicinil hturfrr ii Bcginnus Agents aic mm idling 10 10 lks imIi We mi an cm in every lon Send tu inns n l V r a Tho W E DIBBLE PUB CO Cincinnati O AGENTSSv Aid for aritr did EflJlllair II OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY TO The CLOT OBERIN OHIO ciTir RESTAURANT NO 7 SOUTH MAINST Having purchased this establish ment 1 propose to conduct the business in FIRSTCLASS STYLE I am a practical Baker of longexperience and Bhall give my personalattention to ail the departments of the work TV EDDIN 33 S And other parties supplied with Plain and Fancy Cakes Families furnished with good wholesome bread A choice assortment of Confections always on hand BOARD By the day or week at my Restaurant and meals at all hours for transient customers Oysters by the quart or served in any style JOHN STANTON FROM THE PRESIDENT OF BAYLOR UNIVERSITY u Independence Texas Sept 26 1882 Gentlemen Ayers Hair Vigor Has been used in my household for thrco 1st To prevent falling out of the hair 2d To prevent too rapid cliauge of color 3d As a dressing It has given entire satisfaction in every Instance Yours respectfully Wil Carev Crane AYERS HAIR VIGOR is entirely free from uncleanly dangerous or Injurioussubstances It prevents tho hair from turning gray restores gray hair to its original color prevents haldncss preserves the hair and piomotes its growth cures dandruff and all diseases of tho hair and scalp and is at tho same time a very superior and desirable dressing prepared nv DrJCAyer Co Lowell Mass 1 Sold by all Druggists Rough on Rats Clear out rats mice roaches flies nnts bed hues skunks cliipnnmkb gophurs lbuDruggists Heart Pains Palnitntlon Drousicfil Sucllinira Dizzinc38 Indigestion rTUlitchc Sleeplessness cured by v tu s iicimn neiiewcr Rough on Corns Ask for Wells Hough on Corns 15c Quick complete cure tiaru or soic corns wans ions BaohnPaibi Quick complc euro all Kidney Blirlder ntiil Uiinarv Dicanei ScuMmc irrilat Stone Gravel Catmih ol the Bladder fUUO Druggists I Rough on Dentists Tooth Powder ootli Refreshing Harmlcfs Llogant Clean and Fragruut 15c OrugKiats Thin People Wells Heal tli rtencwor restore hen 1th and vigor curei Dyspeptiu Impotence Sexual Debility 1001 BedBagsFliesFlies ronchos ants hedbuga rats mice gDphers chipmunks cleared out by Hough on ilata 16c I Mothers If you are failing Ijivken worn out and nervous use Wells Health Kcnewer J100 Druggists Lifo Preserver tr you are losiiitr your grip on life try WojIs llealh Rjnowcr Goes direct to woak spots Rough on Toothaohe InBtant relict for Neuralgia Toothache Paccacho Ask for iiough on Toothache 15 and 5 cents Pretty Women Ladpg who would cetain freshness andvivacity Dont leil to try We la HealthRouuwer Rough on Itch Rouftrhon Itch cures humors eruptions rinirworin tetior bult rheum frosted luct chilblains Night Sweats Headache Fever chills malaria dyspepsia cured byWella ilcalih iienewer 1 The Hope of the Nation ChlMrn plow in devolonmiMit mmv ncraw inanu delicalo use Wells Health Henew Roueh on Pain Cnres colic crump diarrhoea external for aches pains sprains headache nnuriilg rheumatism t or man or beast 26 and 50c Rouch on Pain Plaster Porous ami strengthen in im Droved tho lfMt lor backitche naius in cheat or s rheumatism neuralgia 25 cents Drnccists or mail 19ly Snow Carda Cards House to Rent House for Sale Rooms to Rent Rooms and Board Board Piano to Rent etc for sale at the Nkws oilice 18 DELAWARE OHIO mm CAD SELL BEST TEA Strawberry Ham Boneless Ham Breakfast Bacon Pickled Salmon Penny Mackerel Fat Pound Mackerel Smoked Halibut Bologna Sausage Hamlette Dried Beef Crockery Glassware Potatoes String Beans Bananas Cabbage Onions BOSTON BAKED BEANS Canned Soups Canned Salmon Canned Mackerel Canned Beef Canned Oysters fiAnnEn k m ai air t h a Kn OF ALL IZXXTDOS Feed Corn Meal Corn Flour Corn Oats CHICHEIf fis And many other things good to eat and use including always the BABY CARRIAGES We have added to our stock of Hardware etc a full line of BABY CAHHIAGrES We are agents for the celebrated Whitny Carriage and areofferingthem at much lower priies than they were ever sold at before and every one fully warranted Carter Hatch 6tf 0BERLTN OHIO NEW MILLINEKY Mrs J M HOED Extends a cordial invitation to her SPRING MILLINERS Her stock is complete comprisinp everything new and novel that the season affords Ladies please and show you our goods No 3 West College St OBERLIN OHIO PITTSBURGH HMb LOLLEGE AND PITTSBURGH CONSERVATORY OF MUSiGHCO full Music Lessons for 18 Dhtlriol KIH Llhanil Arti Mutif Klnotili Modern rfiiiiiit lv Vntrnl 1 1 enlttif til hirlv tiiihirs Modinit liirj Tliirsli Hi ur onm in I llifori nmklui IliKiKiiiUnta LowYiKu DR I C PERSHING Pittsburgh Pa YlGo IMPORTED VEKY CHEAP the ladies of display of Oberlin and vicinity to call we will be pleased to meet you